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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Ghana's Ashanti Goldfields going for a song
By Trevor Johnson
30 October 1999
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The Ghana-based company, Ashanti Goldfields, is being sought
by a rush of potential buyers looking to purchase gold mines at
rock-bottom prices. Ashanti owns some of the most productive gold
mines in Africaaltogether worth over $2 billion at current
prices. Besides the giant Obuasi mine in Ghana, existing and potential
operations dot the continentin Mali, Senegal, Guinea, Sierra
Leone, Burkina Faso, Niger, Angola, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Tanzania,
Ethiopia and Eritrea. Ashanti's Geita deposit in Tanzania has
been described as "Africa's new El Dorado".
First to enter the bidding was British-based transnational
Lonmin (the mining group, formerly part of Lonrho), which put
in an early bid of around $6 per share. Lonmin owned Ashanti prior
to its partial nationalisation in 1968, and already owns a third
of the company's shares.
Other companies and individuals competing to win control of
the group include the Saudi Arabian investor Prince Al-Waleed
Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the Canadian-based Placer Dome
mining group, and possibly AngloGold of South Africa.
What has made Ashanti such a lucrative target? Most important
have been the wild fluctuations in gold prices, which have destabilised
Ashanti's finances, meaning that its share price is unusually
low. The long-term profitability of the company is not in question,
but its short-term liquidity crisis is making it vulnerable to
a take-over bid.
For some years, the price of gold was in continual decline,
and it was widely expected that this would continue. Ashanti gambled
on gold prices falling by putting money into hedge funds, usually
taken out as a form of insurance against a decline in the value
of a company's products.
The sudden reversal in the trend of gold prices saw Ashanti's
hedge fund turned into a liability, leaving the company owing
as much as $570 million. It now needs its creditor banks to extend
its loan repayment time. Lonmin cut its original offer of $840
million down to $665 million, citing these losses.
Lonmin had hoped that Ashanti's weak financial position would
force the government and others to sell their shares, rather than
see the company crash. Following privatisation, the government
retained a "golden" or controlling share in Ashanti
of 20 percent. Despite this, the company effectively continued
to be run by Lonmin, which pays company manager Sam Jonah's salary.
Ashanti pays Lonmin a $1 million annual fee for services.
Its plan has backfired, however. Bankers such as Goldman Sachs,
who are Ashanti's main financial advisor and its largest hedge
fund creditor, are not prepared to simply accept a bargain sell-off.
They have told the government that it must seek other offers.
Competition over Ashanti's fate has caused political problems
for the government. The minister for mines and energy, Fred Ohene
Kena, was sacked following his comment that the government favoured
a Lonmin takeover. Sam Jonah is also seen as a political threat
to the present government, when President Jerry Rawlings steps
down next year.
Twenty-five percent of the world's gold production takes place
in sub-Saharan Africa, a region with 33 of the 41 Highly Indebted
Poor Countries. These countries were badly affected by the downward
pressure on the price of gold. Instead of benefiting from the
present price rise, it is likely that other gold producers will
be also caught out by hedge fund losses.
The biggest losers from Ashanti's travails are its miners and
their families. Ashanti laid off more than one-fifth of its 10,000
workforce in Ghana earlier this year. Some 500 casual workers
were also sent home during the summer. At Obuasi, 2,000 out of
8,152 shift workers were laid off on September 1. An unnamed Ashanti
official said that the redundancies were permanent layoffs
and would not be reversed. New owners of Ashanti are virtually
certain to bring in a further round of job cuts and productivity
measures.
See Also:
Observations of Ghana: A cruel
juxtaposition of wealth and poverty
[4 March 1999]
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